GREETINGS, WORDPLAY ENTHUSIASTS !!!
A blogsite offering entertaining oddities since January 2020 at the rate of 30x/month. There are now over seventeen hundred posts in these four years. Images -- poetic (including song-lyrics), photographic, and computer-simulated -- are drawn from daily life as well as from poems and wordplay grouped by topic on our parent blog "Edifying Nonsense". The poetry displayed is all original (as are the song-lyrics), although portions evolved through rigorous editing on a collaborative website.
February 25, 2023
FEB 25, Submitted Palindromes: Introduction to presenters -- Sarah Palindrome
GREETINGS, WORDPLAY ENTHUSIASTS !!!
February 24, 2023
FEB 24, creative anachronism: the Hippocratic oath
Authors' Note: The origins of the Hippocratic Oath, as discussed in the above verse, join several others by the authors under the rubric "creative anachronism". Although little is known of classic Greek office routines, there is no confirmation that clerks transcribed dictated medical reports during that epoch. One has to wait to the modern era for the invention of the typo.
Along the same lines, readers are invited to review our small but growing collection of "creative anachronisms" on our blog "Edifying Nonsense" by clicking HERE.
February 23, 2023
FEB 23, lexicon of word-pairs: alliterative binomials E to K
Matching the selection on the first slide, these include "hale and hearty", "Heaven and Hell", "(to)have and (to) hold", "hem and haw", "his and hers", and "kith and kin".
Matching the selection on the second slide, these include "flora and fauna".
You can easily find all of these on our topic-based blog "Edifying Nonsense" by clicking HERE, and following the links.
February 22, 2023
FEB 22, signs of confusion: third collection
This post is the third in a series of 5. You can attempt to get all of this straight by reviewing the collections in the previous posts ...
signs of confusion#2signs of confusion #1
We hope that you enjoyed this post, the third in a series of 5. You can attempt to get all of this straight by pushing on to review the collections in these subsequent posts ...
February 21, 2023
FEB 21, curtained verse: ho- (give it a go)
EDITORS' WARNING: You must be at least 12 years of age to read this post!
February 20, 2023
FEB 20, singable satire: The Red Army Chorus sings " DARK SCHEMES" (Russian Hacking)
PARODY COMPOSED: Giorgio Coniglio, January 2018, related to the 2016 winter Olympics .
February 19, 2023
FEB 19, waterfowl: feral ducks
You can review these illustrated verses in a wider context by proceeding to 'Immersible Verse: Limericks about Waterfowl' on the full-service blog 'Edifying Nonsense'.
February 18, 2023
FEB 18, birdlore: Eastern towhees
February 17, 2023
FEB 17, palinku (poetic novelty): drinks
February 16, 2023
FEB 16, mythed opportunities: Leda and the swan
Authors' Note: King T. refers to Sparta's King Tyndareus, husband of Leda. These characters in the story of "Leda and the Swan" were presumably mortal. However, relevant accounts, as depicted in literature and representative art, vary as to the mortal status of the couple's famous offspring (the twins Helen and Clytemnestra, and Castor and Pollux were hatched as human babies from the oversized eggs.)
"Leda and the Swan" a subtle rendition with the swan at her feet; unspecified British sculptor, Allan Gardens Conservatory, Toronto. |
"Leda and the Swan", bronze sculpture, Bruno Piccirilli, 1945, displayed at Brookgreen Gardens, SC |
February 15, 2023
FEB 15, signs of confusion: second collection
This post is the second in a series of 5. You can attempt to get all of this straight by reviewing the collection in the previous post of November 15, 2022 :
toplessness? |
as a child, I believed that 'Pickering' was an abbreviation for 'pickled herring'. I guess I was wrong |
This post is the second in a series of 5. You can push onwards and review the collections in these subsequent posts ...
February 14, 2023
FEB 14, poetic non-sequitur: decolletage (+ Val's Day)
HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY!!!
February 13, 2023
Feb 13, homophonous verse: identity rhymes
February 12, 2023
FEB 12, portrait of couples: mallard ducks
Enjoy an illustrated poem about the mallard duck, Anas platyrhynchos, by clicking HERE.
February 11, 2023
FEB 11, cinematic guide: beaver tales ("Gone with the Wind")
February 10, 2023
FEB 10, a brief saga (Canadiana): Newfoundland potato famine of 1846 - 8
Back in Ireland, landlords took advantage, and bought tickets to encourage resourceless tenants to emigrate; their arrival in Canada was anticipated charitably by the public and by local governments. In fact, many refugees were sick ("ship's fever" often equated to dysentery or typhus) on arrival or shortly afterward. In the summer of 1847, an estimated 20,000 died in typhus epidemics that ravaged Montreal, Quebec, and even Toronto.
historic plaque, dedicated to a TOronto community leader who perished in the potato-famine related typhus epidemic |
Great Famine (Ireland) - Wikipedia
Newfoundland Potato Famine - Wikipedia
History of Irish immigration to Canada - Irish Post